financetom
British Pound
financetom
/
Forex
/
British Pound
/
Truss Slays the Stagflation Dragon
News World Market Environment Technology Personal Finance Politics Retail Business Economy Cryptocurrency Forex Stocks Market Commodities
Truss Slays the Stagflation Dragon
Mar 22, 2024 2:19 AM

Image courtesy of Parliament.tv.

The prospect of a stronger ending to 2022 for the British Pound came a step closer following news the UK government would cap annual UK gas prices at £2500 for the next two years.

The move effectively caps UK inflation near current levels and staves off the prospect of a recession, according to a leading economist.

Sterling has been sold over recent months as investors feared the UK would be one of the worst hit by a combination of surging inflation and declining economic growth.

Truss' intervention therefore overturns this narrative as she says the moves would likely chop 5 percentage points from the expected peak in inflation.

"The £2,500 cap implies the average households’ monthly bill will rise to £208 in October, from £164. On top, everyone gets a £400 ," says Samuel Tombs, Chief UK Economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics. "So effectively, the average bill will *fall* to £142pm for the Oct-Mar period."

"Recession looking far less likely," he adds.

The Pound to Euro exchange rate started the day in the red but was up slightly at 1.1535 in the wake of the developments.

The Pound to Dollar exchange rate was higher by a quarter of a percent to 1.1543.

James Smith, economist at ING says the UK energy cap of £2500 for the average household will lower the headline rate of inflation by around 5pp.

"We'd now expect a peak of 11% in the autumn vs our prev forecast of 16% in January," says Smith.

Above image courtesy of ING.

Economist Simon French at Panmure Gordon says he thinks the fall in inflation would amount to about 6.3% compared to non-intervention.

"We saw a 16.5% peak in Q2 2023 with no EPG vs peak of 10.2% in Q4 2022 under this proposal," says French.

The cost of the energy bill cap is however a potential headwind for the UK economy and Sterling assets, given the cost will be funded by borrowing. Truss said the costings are not yet at hand but will be set out to parliament.

There are concerns in some corners that the market might not be willing to fund such borrowing, creating the conditions for a UK debt crisis.

However, Andrew Sentance, Senior Adviser to Cambridge Econometrics, says in terms of the UK debt/GDP ratio, this is likely to be falling now due to the inflation impact on nominal GDP.

"So a reasonable package of gov’t support to limit energy price increases should be quite sustainable," says Sentance.

There are further signals the market is welcoming of the moves; the below chart shows the slump in 1-year UK inflation RPI swaps, from a 12% peak two weeks ago to 5.8% today.

Image courtesy of @CNBCJou

Ed Conway at Sky News says based on where wholesale gas prices were a couple of weeks ago, the cost of capping household bills at £2,500 would have been roughly £120bn.

Based on where they are now, it would cost roughly £70bn.

He points out the difference alone is about the cost of furlough, which saw the government guarantee jobs during the Covid pandemic.

But Truss made some significant interventions regarding the future of the UK's energy security, announcing a significant new round of licensing for offshore oil and gas exploration.

Furthermore, a ban on fracking would now be lifted.

The developments would ultimately improve the UK's domestic energy output, lowering imports and contribute to an improvement in the country's balance of payments.

Comments
Welcome to financetom comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Related Articles >
British Pound (GBP) LIVE: Sterling in Steady Recovery After Services PMI Delivers a Blow
British Pound (GBP) LIVE: Sterling in Steady Recovery After Services PMI Delivers a Blow
Mar 22, 2024
Last Updated: 07 April 2014 Updated: The British Pound (GBP) is stable as we move into the second week of April. Selling on global equity markets has seen some relief being enjoyed against the commodity dollars. Meanwhile, we continue to see consolidation vs the Euro and US dollar. This period...
The Pound "Shouldn't be Haunted by the Ghosts of 2022" Says Deutsche Bank
The Pound "Shouldn't be Haunted by the Ghosts of 2022" Says Deutsche Bank
Mar 22, 2024
Above: Image © Pound Sterling Live, original picture by Simon Dawson / No 10 Downing St. On the eve of the UK budget, a Deutsche Bank analyst tackles the question of whether GBP investors ought to fear the return of the bond vigilantes and a repeat of the 2022 episode...
British Pound Sterling Heads Sideways as Equity Markets Rally
British Pound Sterling Heads Sideways as Equity Markets Rally
Mar 22, 2024
By Gary HowesToday's Exchange Rates Below are the spot exchange rates as of the last update: Pound to euro exchange rate: Unchanged on a day-to-day basis at 1.2040.Pound to US dollar exchange rate: 0.01 pct down at 1.6390.Pound to Australian dollar rate: 0.36 pct higher at 1.8364.Pound to New Zealand...
British Pound (GBP) LIVE: Sterling Set for Fresh Bounce vs USD, Bank of England Risk Ahead
British Pound (GBP) LIVE: Sterling Set for Fresh Bounce vs USD, Bank of England Risk Ahead
Mar 22, 2024
Last Updated: 02 April 2014 Updated: Our Live coverage shows the UK pound to be in a period of consolidation at the start of April 2014. With the March PMI series missing expectations the GBP has found little by way of impetus. However, all eyes are on the release of...
Copyright 2023-2024 - www.financetom.com All Rights Reserved